If you are suffering from anything–pain, health problems, emotional turmoil, addictions or disorders of any kind or personal or work problems that keep you awake and feeling out of control–you may have found that wishing for relief can become a constant background noise that is almost as distracting as the suffering. Today I read two brief articles written by the same person, Dr. Christine Lasich, which provided some new perspectives for me–and which I realized can be applied to other situations as well.

Dr. Lasich specializes in physical therapy and rehabilitation and has a spinal-pain practice in California. For the last couple of years I have read her Healing Journal (she posts infrequently, but I re-read the old posts). I believe she is sincerely committed to trying to help those who have painful conditions.

Today, I read an article she wrote for the Health Central Site, Five Principles for Treating Both Pain and Addiction. As I read it I was impressed with her concise, logical steps for dealing with a complex problem. They may be well-known from other literature on the topic, but I liked her way of expressing them.

What is the painful part of your life? As I read and thought about those five steps, I thought they could be applied to all of the things that can cause us pain, suffering, unhappiness and discomfort:

*Physical pain and health problems of any kind–both short term and those that are not ever going away.

*Dependencies and disorders: relationships, a “broken heart” and “heartache”, a specific person who is a negative element, family relationships, money and debt, excessive behaviors, destructive habits and chronic problems that you may have struggled with forever. All the things that you wish were better in your life.

The Five Principles For Treating Both Pain and Addiction are, in brief:

1. Provide Chemical Stability.

2. Motivate for Change.

3. Relieve Suffering

4. Infuse Resiliency

5. Improve Health

Read Dr. Lasich’s very short article to understand how those are applied. Then, do some sit-down thinking to adapt the Five Principles to your situation. I think you will find that the process of reading the article and adapting the principles can start to provide some relief from the pain–any kind of pain–you are feeling. (It’s part of infusing resiliency!) Contact me, if you wish, to let me know how you were able to apply the concepts. I don’t publish personal notes and am happy to hear from anyone who wants to share some thoughts.

Thank you for this link and the article. This is one more tool I can use in what seems like a battle all the time. No physical pain I have ever had has caused me anguish like the mental pain I go through every night when my brain is whirring and I accuse myself repeatedly of so many bad things. I’m going to spend the time you suggested to see if there is any way this could help me find some relief.

Comment by Determined | December 12, 2014

My naturopathic doctor told me to read your website and I’ve enjoyed it a lot. This was the article she told me to start with but I’ve learned a lot from everything, especially about work problems. Thanks!

Comment by H.K. | February 10, 2015

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